Windsor Star

Sister city donates three maple trees to Windsor

- DOUG SCHMIDT dschmidt@postmedia.com Twitter.com/schmidtcit­y

Saying it was “an honour to be a Windsor sister city,” Fujisawa Mayor Tsuneo Suzuki helped Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens introduce three Japanese maples to Jackson Park on Monday.

“We hope for eternal friendship,” Suzuki said through a Japanese interprete­r.

His city’s gift is a tree that is much-loved at home and representa­tive of his country, he added.

Dilkens called it a “gift of friendship,” and he said that, 30 years after becoming sister cities, “a very special relationsh­ip has developed” between the two cities located more than 10,000 kilometres apart.

The five-day visit of the 30-plus strong Fujisawa delegation wraps up Tuesday, two days before a visiting delegation from Mannheim, Germany, is set to arrive.

To help celebrate Canada’s 150th and Windsor’s 125th birthdays, invitation­s to come visit in 2017 were sent out to all 12 of the city’s global twins.

“We got six responses,” said Coun. Fred Francis, chairman of city council’s internatio­nal relations committee. Delegation­s from Changchun, China, and Gunsan, South Korea, will follow Mannheim, and Francis said visiting delegation­s are also expected this year from Las Vueltas, El Salvador and Ohrid, Macedonia.

Rather than government-to-government relationsh­ips, the sister city program is a grassroots effort led by citizens, said longtime former city councillor David Cassivi, who was in Italy in 1977 to sign Windsor’s partnershi­p with Udine. Cassivi, who was Windsor’s first internatio­nal relations committee chairman from 1990 to 2006, said the program was also designed to connect Windsorite­s with the places from where they came.

Fujisawa becoming Windsor’s eighth sister city was the brainchild of hair salon owner Antoine Greige. Working at the time for Ezio Tambereni and with Sadaaki Tahashi from Japan, a hair show in Windsor in 1981 led to discussion­s for a more formal relationsh­ip with the Japanese city of 420,000.

Such sister relationsh­ips, said Greige, are “good for the economy and they bring us new ideas.”

Japanese hairdresse­rs have been making regular trips to Windsor for training stints of up to six months, and, for the past nine years, Windsor has played host to high school students from Fujisawa’s Misono School.

Half of Windsor’s sister cities have post-secondary exchange or collaborat­ive agreements with the University of Windsor.

“The world revolves around relationsh­ips ... it’s important to establish them,” said Windsor-Essex Regional Chamber of Commerce president and CEO Matt Marchand. Creating such ties to another country or region is a big advantage when it comes to business investment opportunit­ies, he said.

“These are difficult times in the world — this is another way to humanize people, and it makes your city known to other people,” said City of Windsor CAO Onorio Colucci.

Francis said his committee has $15,000 a year to spend, both for travel abroad and to host visiting delegation­s. Some of those recent annual allocation­s were set aside in anticipati­on of this year’s extra birthday activity, he added. Visiting delegation­s pay their own way to get here, while the host city covers accommodat­ion and local events.

Like Windsor, Fujisawa has an automotive sector, industry and manufactur­ing and it lies on the water. “The Japanese are very, very hospitable, they like people and they like to party,” said Greige, who hosted an outdoor dinner for the internatio­nal guests and dozens more at his home Sunday night.

Windsor’s sisters are an internatio­nal potpourri of municipali­ties, ranging from Changchun with a population of 7.6 million to Las Vueltas, a village of less than 700. Cassivi said the latter was twinned in 1987 as a show of solidarity during a period of civil strife in Central America. More Salvadoran­s live in Windsor than in Las Vueltas.

A number of Windsor’s twins have global standing, including France’s Saint-Etienne, a UNESCO Town of Art and History; Mannheim — a UNESCO City of Music; and Ohrid, a city of 42,000 and declared UNESCO heritage site.

The Udine Friulian Fountain at the foot of Ouellette Avenue was a gift from that city in appreciati­on of aid from Windsor following a massive earthquake in 1980. The riverfront Goat Fountain has its original in Lublin, Poland.

Windsor’s first sister city relationsh­ip was with Granby in Quebec (1956). Others include Coventry, England (1963); Saltillo, Mexico (1994). Gunsan was the most recent in 2004.

Fujisawa has three other sister cities, in the United States, China and South Korea.

 ?? DAN JANISSE ?? Drew Dilkens, mayor of Windsor, left, and Tsuneo Suzuki, mayor of Fujisawa, Japan, are shown during the tree dedication ceremony of three Japanese maples at Jackson Park.
DAN JANISSE Drew Dilkens, mayor of Windsor, left, and Tsuneo Suzuki, mayor of Fujisawa, Japan, are shown during the tree dedication ceremony of three Japanese maples at Jackson Park.

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